The Borneo Post

Senior Australian minister calls for postal vote on same-sex marriage

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MELBOURNE: One of Australia’s most senior ministers yesterday reignited debate on whether samesex marriage should be legalised, proposing a national postal vote on the issue.

Conservati­ve Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s policy is for a national vote, or plebiscite, but that proposal was defeated in the Senate in late 2016.

Turnbull has said the issue will not be revisited until after the next election due in 2019.

Same-sex marriage is supported by 61 per cent of Australian­s, according to a Gallup opinion poll in 2016.

“I think there is momentum in relation to having the matter resolved one way or the other,” Immigratio­n and Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton told Sky News television.

“I’m working on the assumption that this issue is going to be dealt with in this parliament,” Dutton said in proposing a postal vote.

Opponents to a national vote argue it would be divisive and that a parliament­ary vote could easily decide the issue.

There have only been three plebiscite­s in Australian history, two relating to conscripti­on during World War I, and one to choose a national song in 1977.

Dutton said a postal vote would not require legislatio­n to establish, would not be compulsory and would be a more cheaply administer­ed option than a regular plebiscite.

Opposition Labor Party leader Bill Shorten took to social media yesterday to slam Dutton’s proposal.

“The postal plebiscite is a policy for a government that has neither the intellect to know what to do, nor the courage to do what is right,” he tweeted. — Reuters

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